Holy days are celebrated throughout the year in the Buddhist community. Some of these days would be for birthdays of Bodhisattvas, Magha Puja Day, Buddhist New Year and Vesak.
Buddhist New Year,
No, no one day in Buddhism is holier than any other day. Buddhism is not a religion. However, there are days throughout the year, such as the Buddha's birthday, that regularly stimulate special celebrations and practices. .
Buddhism has many celebrations during the year to mark days of historic or cultural significance. These are not holy days as holy implies a relationship with a deity. There is no deity in Buddhism. Buddhism does not have special day of the week for community observation (essentially no Sunday if you are Christian, no Saturday if you are Jewish or no Friday if you are Muslim)
Yes Buddhism does have holy books, and they are very important to Buddhist. The Tipitaka, is the believed to be the direct words of the Buddha.
are there any festivals in Islam Sikhism and Buddhism
There is no holy person or deity in Buddhism
The Torah is a Jewish holy book, it is not related to Buddhism.
Buddhists celebrate many holy days throughout the year. The Buddhist New Year, Dhamma Day, the Elephant Festival, Ancestor Day and Veska are just a few.
Yes. One of the unique characteristics of most Buddhist teachings is the recognition of our own divine nature. Thus, all people in Buddhism are potentially holy people.
Technically, Buddhism's holy persons, such as Gautama Buddha would be considered gurus.
There is no holy city of Buddhism. There are, however, four places that the Buddha recommended that his followers visit, namely, his birth place, where he woke up or became enlightened, where he gave his first sermon, and where he died. According to the Buddhist teaching (dharma), there is no place is that more holy or sacred than any other place. Each place is equally sacred. That is why there is no holy city of Buddhism.
in Yaroshilam